3 articles read within 30 days

Register for free to read recent articles

REGISTER NOW

Register for free to read a limited number of articles from the past month.
Find out about premium plans.

Already a member? Please log in here.

You can read one more article for free this month

REGISTER NOW Register for free to read 5 number of articles from the past month. Find out about premium plans. Already a member? Please log in here.

You have 2 more articles for free this month if you don't register

REGISTER NOW

Register for free to read more.
Find out about membership plans.

Already a member? Please log in here.

Posted inCentral Europe & BalticsEastern Europe & RussiaEstoniaLatviaRussia

Ethno-Nationalism: Hostages of the (Former) Soviet Empire

RUSSIANS LIVING IN THE FORMER SOVIET Union but outside Russia are in a politically sensitive position. In the newly independent countries in which they live, they are often seen as the representatives of an imperial system, the effects of which are best erased. In Russia, their fate is both a rousing issue in domestic politics and a useful justification for projecting influence into strategically key areas of the former Soviet Union. In a sense, the Russian diaspora has been taken hostage by the nonexistent Soviet imperial state.